Showing only Notes & Links tagged good advice on art, design, creativity and, technology

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It should be unacceptable for us to say that lying about one’s abilities is something that everyone has to do to get ahead. It should be unacceptable for us to say that arrogance and aggression are to be aspired to.

Instead we should be demonstrating that great projects, like the ones Apple produces, are at least in part based upon trying to produce the best thing possible, feeling the integrity in the product you’re making. Trying to do something good.

Tom Coates (plasticbag.org: Should we encourage self-promotion and lies?)

Generally good advice and the best answer so far to Clay Shirky’s sensationally titled Rant About Women.

A commenter points out:

I think what Clay’s getting at is simply: willingness to take calculated risks. His example of saying, “my drafting’s fine” in order to ensure a place in a class is a good example. It’s an obnoxiously macho thing to take badly calculated risks (e.g the financial crisis was not in any significant way caused by women, I bet), but it’s often a productive means to an end.

(via @caterina)

Remember, your life can be as rich and deep as a chocolate cake or it can be a Ho Ho.
Hill Harper (via @NYPL)
Always take the work seriously. Try not to take yourself too seriously.
Clint Eastwood (via @tcarmody)

The change you experienced last night at midnight is available to you every moment of every day. Put that in your pipe and smoke it.” —@danbenjamin

(via Zeldman)

Maira Kalman’s And the Pursuit of Happiness is one of the treasures of the internet. My immediate comment on reblogging this was going to be: “I will never stop posting these.” But as I read through to the end I discovered that this will be her last post. Jeez. The blow is lessened by Kalman’s beautiful parting words:

In my family we do not say “goodbye.” We say “so long.”

Also, the book will be released October 2010!

(via youngna)

We got lectured at today about how the real world isn’t as great as we imagine. Later I got a free cup of coffee, proving them wrong!

That is all.

If you set your goals ridiculously high and it’s a failure, you will fail above everyone else’s success.

James Cameron, director of Terminator and Titanic (via svn)

A commenter cleverly noted that James Cameron seems to be referring to a ridiculously high budget. Filed under trite but true.

The secret is balance: instead of doing everything faster, do everything at the right speed. Sometimes fast. Sometimes slow. Sometimes in between…This is not a declaration of war against speed,” he explains. “Speed has helped remake our world in ways that are wonderful and liberating.” But it can also become “a kind of idolatry…Capitalism is getting too fast even for its own good, as the pressure to finish first leaves too little time for quality control” Under what Honore calls “turbo capitalism,” people exist “to serve the economy, rather than the other way around.

Carl Honore — In Praise of Slowness (via HuffPo)

Not groundbreaking, but I can read advice like this over and it never gets old because I JUST KEEP FORGETTING!

SLEEP FASTER
WORK DEEPER
THINK MORE SOUNDLY
C. Telfer

“Branding tip: if your organization is lucky enough to have a classic Paul Rand logo, never ever fucking change it. Ever.”

Justin Ouellette

(via jenbee via The Real Janelle)